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12-18-2008, 01:01 PM | #21 | |||
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He does? Where? What are they? Jeffrey |
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12-18-2008, 01:22 PM | #22 | |
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7. an expert on a subject: He is an authority on baseball. The terms are the same. Yet you continue to try and split hairs over "authority" vs. "expert". This behavior only demonstrates what Toto said about you earlier: you are the expert in dragging discussions off topic. You are expert in posing questions and then disavowing the clear implications of your questions. |
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12-18-2008, 03:09 PM | #23 | ||||
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12-19-2008, 09:29 AM | #24 |
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My definitions of:
"Authority" - one recognized by a substantial portion of those interested or working in a field as one who is knowledgeable in that field and makes reliable statements about it. Here the key word is "recognized." In other words, in the opinion of the observers. It does not necessarily entail that those statements are IN FACT correct and reliable. "Expert" - one who in fact makes correct and reliable statements on a certain subject, regardless of whether anyone else recognizes that. A person stranded on a desert island could be an expert in the quality of desert island sand, even though there's noone there to witness or verify it. Incidentally, I have never used either word for myself. The mere fact of quoting myself is simply to put forward my views and arguments. Surely that is permissible? Also incidentally (on another matter), Jeffrey likes to use the phrase "to my knowledge" as though this is supplying us with actual evidence or argument for the stance he is taking. I beg to differ. It is nothing more than saying "in my opinion" if he doesn't tell us what his alleged "knowledge" is based on. It's another avoidance tactic, at which he is so proficient. Earl Doherty |
12-19-2008, 03:45 PM | #25 | |||
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In any case, can you point me, Earl, to where I have I have persistently (Jeffrey likes to = has a demonstrable habit of) do what you claim I do with it? Quote:
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Jeffrey |
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12-19-2008, 04:44 PM | #26 | |
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Whether you've ever used the word for yourself or not, you have claimed, both directly and indirectly, an expertise over, and an insight into matters NT that is superior to that possessed or exhibited by many of the most prominent NT scholars (who you have called prejudiced and blinded by their ([in your eyes] unwarranted presuppositions), yes?
And even granting that you've never used the word "expert" of yoursef, are you saying that you are not an expert in, and a (largely [and wrongly] unrecognized) authority when it comes to, matters NT, and especially in the matter of the theology of Paul and what the Pauline Epistles really say with respect to Jesus -- and this in comparison with those who are recognized within the guild as experts on these matters? Note, I am asking a genuine, not a loaded, question. Quote:
Jeffrey |
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12-19-2008, 09:53 PM | #27 | |
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I put forward my views and arguments because I think I am correct. Not necessarily on every detail, but certainly on the whole. Why would I put those views forward, put together a half-million-word website, write and publish a book, if I didn’t believe I was right? And if I think I’m right, then inevitably if mainstream scholarship doesn’t agree with me, I think they are wrong, whether they constitute “the best scholars in the guild” (undoubtedly that includes yourself), or not. It’s not a case of me putting myself forward as an “authority” or an “expert.” I simply believe I’m right and that you’re wrong. Yes, I do believe I have acquired a better insight into, well, certain matters NT, but certainly not everything to do with NT research. There’s a lot I don’t know, or know only incompletely. Some of your “best scholars” could run rings around me where Aramaic or Coptic or Syriac, and probably even Greek, is concerned. Some aspects concerning the Gospels I could improve my knowledge and proficiency in. I hardly know everything there is to know about every document of the early Christian record. However, I feel that I know more than enough on the important stuff which determines whether there was an historical Jesus or not. Besides that, I can recognize when established scholars are committing fallacies, special pleading, reading things into documents, and all the other faults that lead them to erroneous conclusions. Whether they are governed by confessional interests, peer pressure, not wanting to see a lifetime’s commitment compromised, not wanting to feel they’ve been ‘had’ to such a degree—I don’t know. Take your pick, I guess. There’s a lot of disagreement, some of it dramatic, between different people in NT scholarship. Doesn’t each one of them think he or she is more or less right and the others wrong? Shouldn’t you be criticizing them on the same basis? Or is it that, a priori, those established scholars have to be right, and I have to be wrong? No one outside those hallowed halls can possibly have learned enough, or brought a legitimately fresh judgment to things, that he or she could ever call the views of those halls into question? I think you are so caught up in your commitment to the circles you move in and the views you’ve always held, that you can only react to someone like me and ideas like mine with uncompromising antagonism, with no capacity to even consider the possibility that I have anything legitimate to say. That’s demonstrated by your disdainful refusal to read any of my writings before you dump all over them. (At least, you’ve never given any sign that you’ve actually read them.) The assumption is overriding that they cannot possibly say anything which could call into question your tidy little world. It’s a shame, really. Life is too short and unpredictable to set yourself so firmly in concrete. Concrete has a way of anchoring us in one position, with a limited view on the world, and limited rewards. Earl Doherty |
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